Beijing is set to introduce more preferential policies for
Taiwan farmers next week, a senior mainland official said
yesterday.
He Shizhong, director of the Economic Bureau of the Taiwan
Affairs Office of the State Council, said the incentives will be
unveiled at an agricultural forum in south China's Hainan Province.
"The mainland will introduce some policies and measures to
enhance cross-Straits agricultural cooperation," he told a regular
press conference.
He did not specify what the policy package will be, but stressed
that it will provide a "new starting point" for closer and
higher-level agricultural exchanges and cooperation between the
mainland and Taiwan.
The new offer comes as another major effort by Beijing to
benefit Taiwan farmers in central and southern parts of the
island.
Since last May, Beijing has taken a number of goodwill gestures
towards Taiwan farmers, including tariff-free imports of about 30
varieties of Taiwan-grown fruits, vegetables and aquatic
products.
He said the Cross-Straits Agricultural Cooperation Forum will be
held in Boao, Hainan. It will be followed by an exhibition on
cross-Straits agricultural cooperation achievements, which will be
staged in Xiamen, Fujian Province, from October 19 to 20.
The two events are part of inter-party exchanges between the
Communist Party of China (CPC) and Taiwan's opposition Kuomintang
(KMT), which were started following CPC General Secretary Hu Jintao's historic meeting with KMT Chairman
Lien Chan in May last year.
The events "are of significance to improving cross-Straits
relations and achieving a win-win situation for both sides of the
Straits," He said.
The official said 400 delegates from Taiwan and the mainland
will attend the agricultural forum, and the exhibition in Xiamen
will draw more than 4,000 people, including about 1,700 from
Taiwan.
Taiwan's main opposition parties, including the KMT, People
First Party and New Party, will send delegations to the two
events.
The agricultural forum had been originally planned in Taipei in
late October but had to be relocated to the mainland due to the DPP
administration's refusal to approve the visit of Beijing's top
official on cross-Straits affairs.
It was the second time in a year for the DPP administration to
refuse the visit of Chen Yunlin, minister of the Taiwan Affairs
Office, who had planned to attend the Taipei event.
(China Daily October 12, 2006)